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The most-viewed movie of the batch is “Mr. Nice Guy,” the 1997 action-comedy starring Jackie Chan (pictured above), which has more than 16 million views since WB released it on Jan. 1 on YouTube.
Chetverikov influenced several Russian geneticists who later came to work in the West, such as Theodosius Dobzhansky and Nikolay Timofeev-Ressovsky, both of whom continued to work in a similar style. The significance of Chetverikov's work came to light much later, by which time the evolutionary synthesis was virtually complete.
[41] [42] The full-length Major Grom was to be produced by the same team as the short one. [40] The planned budget at that time was at least five million US dollars. [43] The filmmakers also said that the look of Saint Petersburg in the film would differ from the real one, and, in addition, the geography of the city would undergo changes.
The film was directed by Vladimir Besedin, known for his satirical web series Gaffy Gaf Show on YouTube. [75] He also cowrote the script, with Gabrelyanov. Igor Grom was portrayed by Russian actor Alexander Gorbatov. The film itself is a 29-minute short intended to serve as a pilot project before the development of a full-length film.
The Forty-First (Russian: Сорок первый, romanized: Sorok pervyy) is a 1956 Soviet war romance film based on the eponymous novel by Boris Lavrenyov.It was directed by Grigori Chukhrai and starred Izolda Izvitskaya and Oleg Strizhenov.
Yuriy and Lubko sneak aboard a cattle train full of starved Ukrainian corpses. They witness massive starvation and death of their fellow Ukrainians on the roadsides and in pits. Nearing Smila they hijack a Soviet grain truck whose sympathetic Bolshevik soldier driver joins Yuriy's rescue mission, bringing grain to the villagers.
Beria's voice, full of triumph, utters the first sentence of post-Stalinist Russia: "Khrustalyov, My Car!" Klensky is immediately released, but he does not return to medicine. Instead, the general "goes to the people." At the end of the film, he is the commandant of a train. Drinking happily, he balances a glass of port on his shaved head.
The movie with an American Catholic protagonist was released one month before the 1936 anti-abortion law. [22] Just after that, America and Americans disappeared from Soviet cinema. [ 23 ] Lyubov Orlova had to participate in the anti-abortion law promotion company: "I myself want a child, and I will certainly have one.